The Bride's Farewell

Read The Bride's Farewell Online

Authors: Meg Rosoff

Table of Contents
 
ALSO BY MEG ROSOFF
Just in Case
How I Live Now
What I Was
VIKING
Published by the Penguin Group
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First published in 2009 by Viking Penguin, a member of Penguin Group (USA) Inc.
 
 
Copyright © Meg Rosoff, 2009
All rights reserved
 
Publisher’s Note: This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, business establishments, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.
 
LIBRARY OF CONGRESS CATALOGING IN PUBLICATION DATA
Rosoff, Meg.
The bride’s farewell / Meg Rosoff.
p. cm.
eISBN : 978-1-101-10540-5
1. Young women—Fiction. 2. Fiancés—Fiction. 3. England—Fiction. I. Title.
PS3568.O84195B75 2009
813’.54—dc22 2009008887
 
 
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For Ann and Liz
One
O
n the morning of August the twelfth, eighteen hundred and fifty something, on the day she was to be married, Pell Ridley crept up from her bed in the dark, kissed her sisters goodbye, fetched Jack in from the wind and rain on the heath, and told him they were leaving. Not that he was likely to offer any objections, being a horse.
There wasn’t much to take. Bread and cheese and a bottle of ale, a clean apron, a rope for Jack, and a book belonging to Mam with pictures of birds drawn in soft pencil, which no one ever looked at but her.
The dress in which she was to be married she left untouched, spread over a dusty chair. Then she felt carefully inside the best teapot for the coins put away for her dowry, slipped the rope around Jack’s neck and turned to go.
Head down, squinting into the rain, she stopped short at the sight of a ghostly figure in the path. It had as little substance as a moth, but its eyes burned a hole in the dark.
“Go back to bed, Bean.”
It didn’t budge.
She sighed, noticing how the pale oval of a face remained stubbornly set.
“Please, Bean. Go home.” Oh God, she thought, no. But it was no use appealing to God about something already decided.
Without waiting to be invited, the boy scrambled up onto Jack, and with no other option she pulled herself up behind him, feeling the warmth of his thin body against her own. And so it was, with a resigned chirrup to Jack and no tear in her eye, that they set off down the hill, heading north, which at that moment appeared to be the exact direction in which lay the rest of the world.
“I’m sorry, Birdie,” whispered the girl, with a final thought for the husband that should have been. Perhaps at the last minute he would find another bride. Perhaps he would marry Lou.
Anyone will do,
she thought. As long as it isn’t me.
Two
T
he open road. What a trio of words. What a vision of blue sky and untouched hills and narrow trails heading God knew where and being free—free and hungry, free and cold, free and wet, free and lost. Who could mourn such conditions, faced with the alternative?
They’d been on the road barely an hour when the night began to thin and they came to a village identical to the one they’d just left—one road in, one road out, and one longer, less-trodden path that circled round. Every soul in that place knew Pell well enough to know she shouldn’t be up and riding away from home at dawn on her wedding day, so she steered Jack away and skirted each village dawn to dusk till the names grew strange and the people they passed started to look unfamiliar. Even then, to be certain, they kept on, stopping only once under a tree for a meal of brown bread and beer.
Bean rode, even when Pell slid off to walk, his frame so slight she doubted the horse noticed him at all. When she felt overcome by gloom and doubt and astonishment at what she’d done, he smiled encouragement at her, but most of the time he sat silent, looking straight ahead.
“Don’t you want to go home, Bean?” Her idea of freedom had not included him.
But he shook his head, and Pell sighed. What’s done is done, she thought, and no use looking back.
They were headed for the horse fair at Salisbury. It was less a plan than a starting point, but it led them into the great anonymous bulk of England where an infinite number of possible lives beckoned. Away from Nomansland, away from Mam and Pa. Away from Birdie Finch.
“He’ll make a good steady husband,” her sister Lou had told her, more than once. “And you like him well enough already.”
“But I can ride and shoe a horse better than he can.”
“Is that your best objection?” Lou wished someone would look at her the way Birdie looked at Pell.
“It will have to do,” Pell laughed, and wheeled her horse off across the heath.
Lou watched them go, pressing her lips together with disapproval.
Everyone knew Birdie and Pell would be married. They’d been betrothed practically from birth, or at least from the first time she’d ridden a horse, just after she learned to walk, set up behind Birdie and holding on for dear life. That pony had no time for children, but Birdie stuck to him and Pell stuck to Birdie, first like brother and sister, and later with her head buried in his shoulder and her arms around his waist.
“When we’re grown,” he’d say, “you’ll be married to the finest blacksmith in two counties.”
“You ought to marry Lou,” Pell answered. “She’s the one wants a husband.”
He looked at her, injured. “I’ve nothing to say to your sister, and you know it.”
She couldn’t contradict him, for it was true that Lou hated mud and horses equally, was the least likely person to attend a difficult calving or grab hold of a pony’s mane and swing up onto its back.
There was a time—an early time—when the thought of marrying Birdie had made Pell proud, not least for besting Lou, who everyone knew would make the better wife. In those days, boy and girl spent every spare moment together, from first dawn till last light, and there wasn’t a horse they couldn’t catch, ride, and tame. Before she was old enough to know what kissing was, he’d kissed her and said, “There, now, that means we’ll be married someday.” And at first she believed him because she wanted to, and later because she couldn’t think of anything else to believe.
“On
that
spot,” he said one day, pointing to the empty field just beyond his parents’ home. “That’s where we’ll build our house, and fill it to bursting with children.” He held his arms out wide, to indicate multitudes.
Pell stared at him. A house full of children? She had only to look at her mother—worn and shapeless with a leaking bladder, great knotted blue veins, and breasts flat as old wineskins—to reject that plan. And worse, even, than the physical toll was the grinding disappointment, the drudgery, the changelessness of life in this place.
Toil and hardship and a clamor of mouths to feed? Not now, Pell thought. Not ever.
Three
T
hat first afternoon, they came to a hamlet consisting of four thatched wooden houses and two more made of cob. Pell stopped outside the one with the nicest garden, where a girl her own age fed soured milk and slops to the family pig. The girl had a face already pulled inward with troubles, but she wiped her hands on her apron and set down the bucket when she saw Pell. They considered each other while passing the time, one wondering who was the stranger with a child and a white horse, and what was she doing here, the other happy to observe a life of feeding slops to a pig, as long as it wasn’t her life.

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